The Journal

Apr 2002: Vol. 1, Issue 1
Editorial
Articles
- Dr. Robert Browning. Editorial, The First Issue
- The Program of the Fifteenth Naval History Symposium at the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland USA
- Stanley J. Adamiak, A Naval Depot and Dockyard on the Western Waters: The Rise and Fall of the Memphis Naval Yard, 1844–1854
- Joseph-James Ahern, The United States Navy’s Early Atomic Energy Research, 1939–194
- John Beeler, In the Shadow of Briggs: A New Perspective on British Naval Administration and W. T. Stead’s 1884 “Truth about the Navy” Campaign
- John Berryman, British Imperial Defence Strategy and Russia: The Role of the Royal Navy in the Far East, 1878–1898
- Richard Bradford, Learning the Enemy’s Language: U.S. Navy Officer Language Students in Japan, 1920 – 1941
- Stephen Budiansky, German vs. Allied Codebreakers in the Battle of the Atlantic
- Harold Cones and John Bryant, Dangerous Crossings: The First Modern Polar Expedition, 1925
- Michael J. Crawford, The Lasting Influence of Theodore Roosevelt’s Naval War of 1812
- Hal M. Friedman, Officer Education in the Twentieth Century U.S. Navy , Panel Commentary
- Howard J. Fuller, ‘The fiery focus’: An Analysis of the Union Ironclad Repulse at Charleston, 7 April 1863
- H. Michael Gelfand, “Revolutionary Change at Evolutionary Speed”: Women and the United States Naval Academy
- Terrell Gottschall, Officer Training in the Prussian Navy: The Professionalization of the Naval Officer Corps in the 1860s
- Serhat Guvenc, Building a Republican Navy in Turkey: 1924-1939
- Manley R. Irwin, The Naval Policies of the Harding Administration: Time for a Reassessment?
- Hubert C. Johnson, Anglo-American Naval Inventors, 1890–1919: Last of a Breed
- Dr. Lisa Y. King, “They called us bluejackets”: The Transformation of Self-emancipated Slaves from Contrabands of War to Fighting Sailors in the South Atlantic Blocking Squadron during the Civil War
- Robert M. Oxley, The Civil War Gulf Blockade: The Unpublished Journal of a U.S. Navy Warrant Officer Aboard the USS Vincennes, 1861–1864
- C. L. W. Page, The Great Landing 1917
- Jon Parshall, Creation of a Web–Enabled Naval Operations Database
- Douglas Peifer, Forerunners to the West German Bundesmarine: The Klose Fast Patrol Group, the Naval Historical Team Bremerhaven, and the U.S. Navy’s Labor Service Unit (B)
- Denise E. Pilato, Martha Coston: A Woman, a War, and a Signal to the World
- Angus Ross, Losing the Initiative in Mercantile Warfare: Great Britain’s Surprising Failure to Anticipate Maritime Challenges to Her Global Trading Network in the First World War
- Eric C. Rust, The Case of Oskar Kusch and the Limits of U-boat Camaraderie in World War II: Reflections on a German Tragedy
- Robert J. Schneller, Jr., The Genesis of the Minority Recruiting Program at the U.S. Naval Academy, 1965–1976
- Douglas V. Smith, Preparing for War: Naval Education Between the World Wars
- Ian Speller, Amphibious Renaissance The Royal Navy and the Royal Marines, 1956-1966
- Carlos Tromben, Naval Presence: The Cruiser Esmerelda in Panama(English) / (Spanish)
- Anthony P. Tully, Calculating Scenarios in the Loss of CV Shōkaku
- Kevin J. Weddle , “There should be No Bungling About this Blockade:” The Blockade Board of 1861 and the Making of Union Naval Strategy
- Jeanie M. Welch, Without a Hangman, Without a Rope: Navy War Crimes Trials After World War II
- Linton Wells II, Computer Methods for Investigating Naval History Panel Overview and Summary
- Glenn F. Williams, Uncle Sam’s Webfeet: The Union Navy in the Civil War
- Richard Wolff, Computer Methods for Investigating CV Taihō
Book Reviews